The persuasion that Nature is, in Leopardi's words, not a caring mother but a \u201cmalign or negligent stepmother\u201d is a central idea of the Gnostic thought that has haunted Western culture for centuries. Herman Melville and Cormac McCarthy stand out, among the American writers, as those who have managed to revive this tradition of thought, and to rearticulate it for their respective times, in the most striking way. In their works they force the readers to renegotiate their ideas of the relationship between man and environment, interior and exterior, ethics and ethos. In Moby-Dick, Melville represents the natural environment as the mere superficial layer of an abyss populated by indifferent and ungraspable forces, overwhelming the huma...
By reviewing the critical literature on Melville and Transcendentalism and then undertaking a close ...
For Herman Melville, the terms of bipolarity are inadequate. His vision attempts to encompass a mult...
This thesis explores how Herman Melville's depiction of the relationship between Man\ud and Wilderne...
The persuasion that Nature is, in Leopardi's words, not a caring mother but a “malign or negligent s...
This essay presents an analysis of the religious and philosophical ideas present in the early fictio...
Focusing on the significant and also ambivalent role that nature has always played in American li...
William Faulkner’s “The Bear” has often been cast as a lamentation of the loss of wilderness and the...
At the time Herman Melville was grappling with the monstrous manuscript that was to become Moby-Dick...
Although Herman Melvilleʼs Moby-Dick is often viewed as a philosophical work, the paper argues that...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 216-221)Critics writing on Cormac McCarthy often note the st...
Language, spirituality, and the natural world are all prominent themes in the novels of Cormac McCar...
This thesis examines the work of Cormac McCarthy, in which I will argue against assertions that McCa...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
Following the growth of criticism related to Cormac McCarthy, this study examines the author\u27s ea...
The quest is an archetypal theme of myth and literature, one which indicates the dreams, ideas and b...
By reviewing the critical literature on Melville and Transcendentalism and then undertaking a close ...
For Herman Melville, the terms of bipolarity are inadequate. His vision attempts to encompass a mult...
This thesis explores how Herman Melville's depiction of the relationship between Man\ud and Wilderne...
The persuasion that Nature is, in Leopardi's words, not a caring mother but a “malign or negligent s...
This essay presents an analysis of the religious and philosophical ideas present in the early fictio...
Focusing on the significant and also ambivalent role that nature has always played in American li...
William Faulkner’s “The Bear” has often been cast as a lamentation of the loss of wilderness and the...
At the time Herman Melville was grappling with the monstrous manuscript that was to become Moby-Dick...
Although Herman Melvilleʼs Moby-Dick is often viewed as a philosophical work, the paper argues that...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 216-221)Critics writing on Cormac McCarthy often note the st...
Language, spirituality, and the natural world are all prominent themes in the novels of Cormac McCar...
This thesis examines the work of Cormac McCarthy, in which I will argue against assertions that McCa...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
Following the growth of criticism related to Cormac McCarthy, this study examines the author\u27s ea...
The quest is an archetypal theme of myth and literature, one which indicates the dreams, ideas and b...
By reviewing the critical literature on Melville and Transcendentalism and then undertaking a close ...
For Herman Melville, the terms of bipolarity are inadequate. His vision attempts to encompass a mult...
This thesis explores how Herman Melville's depiction of the relationship between Man\ud and Wilderne...